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Crowded Space, Fertile Ground: Party Entry and the Effective
Number of Parties1
Daniel M. KselmanJuan March [email protected]
Eleanor Neff PowellYale University
Joshua A. TuckerNew York University
September 20, 2012
1Many thanks to Jon Eguia, Herbert Kitschelt, Alex Kuo, Kevin Morrison, Michael Peress, and
Participants in the International Conference on Political Economy and Institutions (ICOPEAI),
University of Vigo 2012, for valuable feedback on previous versions.
Abstract
This paper develops a novel argument as to the conditions under which new political parties will
form in democratic states. Our approach hinges on the manner in which politicians evaluate
the policy implications of entry alongside considerations of incumbency for its own sake. We
demonstrate that, if candidates care sufficiently about policy outcomes, then the likelihood of
party entry should increase with the effective number of status quo parties in the party system.
This relationship weakens, and eventually disappears, as politicians’ emphasis on ‘office-seeking’
motivations increases relative to their interest in public policy. We test these predictions at the
macro-level in contemporary Europe and at the micro-level in Turkey, uncovering strong support
for the argument that party system fragmentation should positively affect the likelihood of entry
when policy-seeking motivations are relevant, but not otherwise.
1 Introduction
Under what conditions will political entrepreneurs in democratic states create new political parties?
This phenomenon, generally labeled ‘party entry’, has been tied to numerous important contempo-
rary social and political outcomes. In Western Europe, the emergence of Green and Radical Right
parties in the 1980’s led to increased attention to issues such as the environment and immigration
(Kitschelt 1995; Rydgren 2004, 2005; Meguid 2008). Myerson (1993) argues that the threat of en-
try by new political parties, when credible, reduces the extent to which status quo political leaders
can get away with graft and political corruption. Almost by definition, new party entry increases
party system volatility, which scholars, especially those studying newly emerging democracies in
Latin America and Eastern Europe, have identified as a potential force for undermining processes of
democratic consolidation (Roberts and Wibbels 1999; Tavits 2005; Powell and Tucker 2009). New
party entry can also fundamentally reorient politics within a single country, as has been the case
with the Turkish Justice and Development Party, which emerged in 2001 and profoundly changed
the nature of Turkish politics and political-economy (Kumbaracıbası 2009).
At the risk of over-simplification, research on the subject is generally situated in one of two
literatures: the literature on party competition and spatial theory, which dates to Downs (1957),
and the growing and expansive literature on party-system volatility. In a recent contribution to
the latter, Mainwaring et. al (2010) demonstrate that, in a sample of North, South, and Central
American cases, new parties in the modern era have benefited from rapid developments in mass
communications technology. Although not their substantive emphasis, the authors also control in
their analyses for the effective number of parties competing in a party system because:
‘A fragmented party system indicates a permeable electoral market in which new contenders canmore easily win a meaningful share of voters. Consequently, it makes it more inviting for politiciansto form a new party and for voters to support it.’ (Mainwaring et al., 2010; pp. 15).
They find some empirical support for the idea that more fragmented party systems should be
characterized by more entry, though the statistical significance and substantive size of the regression
coefficients varies somewhat from analysis to analysis.
Interestingly, the notion that new parties should be more likely to form in fairly crowded elec-
toral markets runs counter to the central line of thinking from research on party competition and
1
spatial models. Rather than emerging in environments where large numbers of parties currently
crowd the electoral space, Downs (1957) argued that new parties would emerge when a substantial
portion of the popular preference space is unoccupied by status quo organizations, stimulating voter
demand for new representative organizations.1 Research in American politics (Rosenstone et al.,
1996) has employed this framework to explain the emergence of third parties in American elections,
suggesting that this happens when the two main parties’ fail to cover important portions of the po-
litical spectrum. Indeed, from the perspective of theories grounded in electoral demand, the notion
that entry should be more prevalent in fragmented party systems is somewhat counterintuitive.
In this paper we provide a novel supply-side explanation for new party entry, which begins
by distinguishing between the office seeking and policy seeking motivations of potential new party
leaders. The argument, which is grounded in a spatial model of party entry (Kselman and Tucker
2011), provides the micro-foundations for a hypothesis that party entry should increase as the
effective number of political parties in that system increases, which is precisely the systems where
we might expect demand for new parties to be weakest. To summarize, from the perspective of a
policy-motivated political entrepreneur, in systems with small numbers of pre-existing parties the
formation of a new organization will often have either a detrimental or negligible impact on policy.
On the other hand, in systems with large numbers of pre-existing parties, entering often leads to an
expected policy which is preferred to that which would have emerged absent the decision to enter.
As such, when candidates are sufficiently concerned with actual public policy outcomes, party entry
should be less likely in systems with a small number of status quo parties than in systems with
larger numbers of status quo parties. Importantly, we also demonstrate that this effect should
obtain independent of the electoral system in place.
While on the whole our theoretical model is thus consistent with the hypothesis cited above
(Mainwaring et al. 2010), it also suggests that this hypothesis needs to be qualified: the positive
1Spatial research on party entry has since concentrated primarily on the ‘Entry-Deterring Dis-
persion’ hypothesis, which, in its most basic form, states that parties will choose positions that
diverge from the median voter’s ideal point so as to obstruct the electoral success of new political
parties (Palfrey 1984; Greenberg and Shepsle 1987; Osborne 2000; Lee 2007). This literature’s
core finding shares the Downsian emphasis on demand factors: new parties will be successful when
status quo organizations converge to the median, thus leaving parts of the electorate unrepresented;
in turn, status quo organizations will avoid convergence.
2
relationship between party system fragmentation and the incentives to form new parties should
only exist if politicians are sufficiently policy-seeking. The predicted relationship between party
system size and new party entry becomes weaker, and eventually disappears, the more concerned
potential new party leaders are with office holding as opposed to policy outcomes. Furthermore,
our logic is based on the idea that potential new party leaders are at least somewhat constrained in
terms of where along the political spectrum they could place a new political party. As potential new
leaders become less constrained in this regard, we again expect the posited relationship between
party system size and new party entry to disappear. In party systems where political entrepreneurs
are either purely office-seeking and/or unconstrained in their platform announcements, the effective
number of parties should have little predictive effect on party entry, and demand-side factors may
once again emerge as pre-eminent.
After we elaborate on these theoretical arguments in Section 2, in Sections 3 and 4 we present
macro-level and micro-level tests of these arguments with original data sets collected by the authors.
In Section 3, we examine the relationship between the number of parties in a party system and
party entry across two decades of European elections. The results are strongly consistent with
theoretical expectations: in exactly the situations where policy motivations are likely to be the
strongest and potential new leaders the most constrained - established democracies in Western
Europe - entry becomes more prevalent as the status quo number of parties increases. The same
is not true of situations where we suspect party leaders are more concerned with access to office,
and have more flexibility in terms of where they can place their new parties across the political
spectrum: newer democracies in Eastern Europe.2 Section 4 then considers a single legislative
context: the Turkish Grand National Assembly between 1987 and 2007. These data allow us to
track not only the appearance of new parties in the Turkish parliament, but also the individual-
level party switching behavior of MP’s during any given legislative session. Analysis of this data
once again uncovers significant support for our core hypotheses. The formation of new parties by
2Section 2.3 refers to both quantitative and qualitative evidence that the distinction between
party competition in Western and Eastern Europe is useful for operationalizing our key scope
conditions. This data corroborates our own sense, based on extensive observation of politics in
the region, that political entrepreneurs in Eastern Europe are less platform-constrained and less
policy-motivated than those in Western Europe.
3
leaders for whom genuine policy commitments complement office-seeking motivations is positively
correlated to status quo parliamentary fragmentation. On the other hand, the appearance of less
ideologically motivated new parties bears little relationship to the effective number of parliamentary
parties.
While we believe the primary theoretical contribution of the manuscript is to incorporate
supply-side considerations in a spatial theory of new party formation, we are also building on
previous work in the comparative study of party system change and volatility, which has featured
elements of both supply and demand in its analyses. Some work in this literature has focused
either on one particular type of new party (e.g. Herbert Kitschelt’s work on ecological (1989) and
radical right (1994) parties in Western Europe) or on the formation of new parties in one particular
country (e.g. Rosenstone, Behr, and Lazarus (1996) on third parties in American politics). For
example, Kitschelt (1989) argues that Green parties will be most successful not only when the
electorate finds environmental issues to be salient and unaddressed by status quo organizations,
but also when the institutional and party system context provides a steady supply of motivated
Green Party candidates.
Hug (2001) examines the phenomenon of new party entry in a cross-national statistical setting,
arguing that new parties emerge when there is both popular demand due to the appearance of new
political issues and a potential supply of new parties because of permissive institutional or party
system environments. In an important recent contribution which investigates aggregate systemic
volatility, rather than new party entry per se, Bischoff (2012) demonstrates that supply factors
seem to outweigh demand-side factors in a sample of West European cases, and in particular
demonstrates that party system fragmentation has a positive effect on overall systemic volatility.3
Tavits (2006, 2008) replaces the language of supply and demand with the language of ‘costs, benefits,
and probabilities’, finding that entry becomes more likely as the costs of forming new parties
decrease, the benefits of gaining office increase, and the probability that new parties gain office
increases.4
3Based on our research, we would suggest that this relationship is most likely driven by the
portion of ‘aggregate’ volatility captured by new party entry. Indeed, our data suggests that there
is a much smaller effect for party system fragmentation on the systemic volatility which arises due
to vote-shifts within the existing set of parties (results available from authors upon request).4A partial measure of party system fragmentation also appears on the right-hand side of regres-
4
Finally, Harmel and Robertson (1985) argue that an electoral system’s ‘permissiveness’ (as
measured by its proportionality) is a consistent positive predictor of party entry. Bischoff (2012)
suggests that, at least with respect to aggregate volatility, this effect of electoral systems should work
primarily through the effect of electoral systems on party system fragmentation (Duverger 1952;
Cox 1997). We address this argument directly, demonstrating first that the correlation between
electoral rules and party system fragmentation is not nearly high enough to preclude meaningful
statistical analysis; and second that, when confined to the portion of volatility arising from new
party entry, systemic fragmentation is a far stronger predictor than are electoral institutions.
2 Party Entry and the Effective Number of Existing Parties
We seek to understand the extent to which party entry will vary according to candidates’ relative
emphasis on policy as opposed to office-seeking motivations, and according to the size of the existing
party system. Our primary prediction is that if (a) candidates care about policy outcomes in
addition to incumbency for its own sake, and (b) candidates are constrained in the range of credible
policy outcomes which they can propose to the electorate, then we would expect to find more new
party entry as the effective number of parties in a party system increases. As we move away from
these two conditions - that is, politicians who are not constrained in where they can enter the
political space and/or do not care about the policy implications of doing so - then we will no longer
expect to find this relationship.5
sion analyses in Tavits (2006, 2008). The measure employed is not a measure of overall status quo
fragmentation, but rather of the party system’s overall count of new parties in the two most recent
elections. Even controlling for the number of new entrants, the author demonstrates that, among
other things, unemployment and ethnic heterogeneity lead to larger vote shares for new parties.5The original Downsian model of electoral competition (1957) contained purely office-seeking
candidates who were totally unconstrained in their platform announcements. Since then, formal
theoretic research in a wide variety of fields has relaxed both assumptions. Spatial models of
elections have investigated a number of distinct motivations which might influence candidate be-
havior, from vote-seeking, to policy-seeking, and more recently to rent-seeking (Wittman 1977,
1983; Calvert 1985; Strom 1990; Persson and Tabellini 2000; Roemer 2001). Literature grounded
in the citizen-candidate model of politics assumes that candidates are constrained to adopt their
own ideal points in democratic elections (Osborne and Slivinsky 1996; Besley and Coate 1997).
Iversen and Soskice (2006) also adopt this assumption in their seminal work on electoral systems
5
A policy-seeking political entrepreneur deciding whether or not to form a new party must
ask herself: Will entering lead to a policy-outcome which is more-preferred than that associated
with the status quo, or alternatively will it lead to a policy outcome which is less-preferred than
the status quo? Elsewhere, we develop a game theoretic model which addresses this question with
respect to two-party systems (Kselman and Tucker 2011). The theoretical results are sufficient to
identify the total policy benefit space in any two-party system, where ‘policy-benefit space’ is defined
as the range of platform positions and candidate ideal points over which a potential entrant can
improve the game’s policy outcome by forming a new party. The reason that we expect fewer new
parties in party systems with a smaller number of effective of parties is that these policy-improving
zones tend to be much more prominent in systems with larger numbers of parties. Conversely, in
systems with smaller numbers of parties, there are more opportunities for new party entry to have
an adverse effect on policy outcomes.
Before outlining this argument in more detail, let us consider the two important scope condi-
tions: that potential party leaders are sufficiently policy-seeking; and that they are constrained in
the range of credible campaign platforms they can adopt (i.e., where the potential new party can
be placed in the policy space). First, if the entrant in question is unconstrained as to where she
can place her party on an ideological spectrum, then even if smaller party systems have a narrower
policy-benefit space than more fragmented party systems, the politician in question will be able
to move her party to one of these beneficial spaces. Put otherwise, in a world where potential
new party leaders can place their party anywhere on the political spectrum, comparing the relative
size of party systems’ policy-benefit space becomes is no longer relevant. Similarly, if a politician
does not care about policy outcomes, then the risk of adversely affecting policy in smaller party
systems becomes irrelevant. As discussed below, our theoretical logic supplies no reason to expect
the formation of parties by purely office-seeking politicians to be positively correlated to the status
quo effective number of parties.
and redistribution in Western Europe, assuming that candidates are constrained to announce as a
campaign platform the ideal point of the social class they represent.
6
2.1 The Policy-Benefit Space in Two-Party Systems
With these caveats in mind, we can now explicate in greater detail the intuition behind our claim
that the policy consequences of entry will be more favorable when the number of status quo parties
is larger, and more particularly that the ‘policy-benefit space’ is positively correlated with the
effective number of pre-existing parties competing in a system. The entry decision affects policy
via its affect on parties’ relative vote shares, which in turn affect the process of executive formation
and ultimately policy implementation. We begin by considering a proportional representation
electoral system, although we later relax this assumption. Consider first a party system containing
two large parties: a left party L and a right party R that have roughly similar support, such
that each would win a pairwise contest with roughly 50% probability. If only these two parties
compete, the election’s outcome will thus be a single-party government of either the left or the
right, leading in turn to either left-leaning or right-leaning policies. Now imagine a left-leaning
political entrepreneur: what is likely to be the effect on policy if she decides to form a new political
party at or near her ideal point?
Stated most generally, entry is likely to exert a negative impact on policy outcomes in such
circumstances because, by forming a new party on the political left, this potential party leader
would effectively divide the vote-share of left-leaning voters between the status quo party L and a
new organization, thus leaving status quo party R as the system’s unquestioned plurality winner
and dominant party. As a result, in two-party systems entry of a new leftist party often leads to
an increased likelihood of single party government by party R.6 In turn, from the perspective of a
policy-motivated political entrepreneur, forming a new party often generates an ‘expected policy’
which is less preferred than the policy outcome of a more-or-less 50-50 lottery between parties L
and R (i.e. the ‘expected policy’ absent the decision to enter). A symmetric argument applies to
right-leaning political entrepreneurs considering entering the political system.
The preceding discussion applies to situations in which both parties L and R have some
positive probability of winning in a pairwise contest. For more lopsided situations, in which either
L or R has an overwhelming likelihood of winning a pairwise contest, entering may have absolutely
6Moreover, in the absence of single party government, this will in more cases than not lead to
increased prominence for party R, as the overwhelming plurality winner, in any ensuing coalition
formation process.
7
no impact on the election’s ultimate policy outcome. For example, if party L is expected to win 65%
of the vote to R’s 35%, then potential entrants on the left will have to weigh the considerations
outlined above, and in particular the risk that entering might lead to a less-preferred ‘expected
policy’ by giving R an increased influence on the political process. On the other hand, policy-
motivated entrepreneurs on the right may be dissuaded from forming new parties if these parties
would fail to upset L’s electoral majority, and thus fail to effect the game’s expected policy outcome.
Thus potential entrants in such contexts will generally be dissuaded by the fact that entry either
implies dividing one’s own support and empowering ideological opponents, or has no impact at all
on the game’s equilibrium policy outcome.7
2.2 The Policy-Benefit Space in Multi-Party Systems
When we move to multi-party systems in which ideological camps are divided ex ante, both of
the above dynamics weaken: rather than having a detrimental or negligible effect on the game’s
ultimate policy outcome, entry in multi-party systems should generally allow political entrepreneurs
to ‘pull’ expected policy outcomes closer to their own ideal points. To see this, consider a party
system comprised of three status quo parties, a left party L, a right party R, and a center party
C, in which electoral support is distributed in such a way that no clear dominant party exists.8
Unlike the two-party case outlined above, the outcome of an election featuring only the status quo
parties will generally be either a center-left coalition or a center-right coalition.
Let us again begin with a leftist political entrepreneur who is considering forming a new party
near his or her ideal point on the political left. In the standard spatial voting framework, entry for
leftist entrepreneurs will have some impact on L’s vote share, but will have little to no impact on
7An exception to this rule occurs for potential entrants whose ideal points is at or near the
median voter’s ideal point, and who are thus fairly indifferent between the status quo parties L and
R: for a small range of centrist political entrepreneurs in two-party systems, entry may lead to an
improvement in the game’s ‘expected policy’. But overall, the ‘policy-benefit space’ for entry will
be very small in two-party systems. For more, see Kselman and Tucker (2011).8Extending our past model of party entry from two- to multi-party systems is a tricky process;
and in particular, while the game always yields unique and stable outcomes, without certain strong
symmetry assumptions its results cannot be parsimoniously stated as closed-form expressions. That
said it is straightforward, though somewhat laborious, to solve the multi-party model for any given
set of exogenous circumstances. We refer to some simple examples below to elaborate.
8
the vote shares of parties R and C. In turn, in most circumstances entry will have only a marginal
effect on the overall probability that center-left as opposed to center-right coalitions will form.9
Furthermore, since entry on the left has little impact on the vote shares of parties R and C, it has
little effect on the policy which would be ultimately implemented by a center-right coalition. On
the other hand, this new party would be a likely member of any possible center-left coalition, thus
pulling the coalition’s policy outcome closer to the entrant’s ideal position than the policy which
would have emerged from a coalition including only parties C and L. Entry on the party system’s
left thus improves the policy outcome of a left coalition without worsening the policy outcome of a
right coalition, such that in expectation that entry entails a policy benefit. A symmetric argument
applies to potential entrants on the right side of the political spectrum.10
The general conclusion which emerges from this theoretical exercise is that policy-benefit
zones are significantly wider in three-party than they are in two-party systems, for the simple
reason that there is less of a danger of splitting the vote on one’s own side of the ideological
spectrum: in more fragmented party systems vote shares on both sides of the political spectrum
9To understand the strategic logic consider an example in which, absent the decision to enter,
both the center and right parties would choose one another as coalition partners, while the left
party would choose to form a coalition with the center party if named formateur. If a new party
forms on the political left, this will have little effect on the vote shares of the center and right
parties; and furthermore, syphoning a small portion of the status quo left party’s vote-share will,
in most (but not all...) circumstances, have only a minimal effect on that party’s likelihood of
being named formateur. Thus, unlike two-party systems, where entering and syphoning a small
vote share can have a huge impact on the likely partisan identity of the executive, the tendency in
three-party cases is for entry to have only a marginal effect on the likelihood that specific coalitions
will form. Finally, even this already marginal effect will be muted if we allow the possibility that
the new entrant herself may be named formateur.10As with the two-party case, there is again an exception to the rule: among a small subset
of potential entrants near the median voter’s ideal point, entry has the effect of dividing party
C’s electoral market share between two centrist parties, which in turn will weaken the bargaining
capacity of centrist parties in coalition governments, and generate more extreme policy outcomes
than those associated with the decision not to enter. The three-party case is thus in many ways a
mirror image of the two-party case: in two-party systems all but a small range of centrist political
entrepreneurs will perceive that entry entails a policy cost, while in three-party systems all but a
small range of centrist political entrepreneurs will perceive that entry entails a policy benefit.
9
are already split. In turn, from the perspective of policy-motivated actors, the supply of motivated
entrants should be higher in three-party systems than in two-party systems. This prediction should
continue to hold as the number of status quo parties increases from three to four, four to five,
and so on. As party systems become more and more fragmented, ceteris paribus new entrants
will suffer less from the penalties of strategic voting and disproportionality, thus enhancing their
impact on the policy-outcomes of coalition formation processes. As well, in highly fragmented party
systems potential entrants will have much less information as to the likely identity of the eventual
formateur; thus, the potential cost of taking formateur status away from a status quo party of
similar ideological convictions, which may exist in three-party systems, should dissipate in larger
party systems. In fact, new entrants in highly fragmented systems will have both a higher a priori
probability of affecting equilibrium policy outcomes than they do in either two- or three-party
systems, as well as some possibility of being awarded formateur status themselves. Put simply,
the policy benefits (costs) of entry should steadily increase (diminish) with increasingly fragmented
vote shares.11 Our goal in the empirical sections below will be to uncover evidence in favor of the
overriding prediction that, when our scope conditions are met, the likelihood of entry should be
positively related to size of the pre-existing party system.
While this argument does depend on the presence of policy-motivated and platform-constrained
politicians, it is robust to relaxing the proportionality assumption. In fact, moving from per-
fectly proportional systems to imperfectly proportional systems, and eventually to majoritarian
(MAJ) systems, only strengthens our argument. MAJ elections in particular have the effect of
over-representing large parties and under-representing small parties. In turn, the consequence of
dividing the electoral support of voters in one’s own ideological camp will be amplified as compared
to the purely proportional case, since dividing the vote share of one’s own constituency is likely
to lead to a single-party government of competing ideological persuasion. That said, regardless of
the electoral rules in place, the fact remains that entry will tend be disincentivized in concentrated
party systems as compared to fragmented party systems.
11We expect there to be an ‘upper-bound’ to this effect: a level of status quo party-system
fragmentation above which increasing the effective number of existing parties no longer increases
the range of potential entrants. While beyond our current scope, we look forward to identifying
this upper-bound analytically in future work.
10
2.3 From Theory to Data
In order to test our argument we need to operationalize situations in which potential party leaders
will be both concerned with policy outcomes – i.e., not motivated solely by office-seeking goals –
and constrained in where they can credibly place a new party on the ideological spectrum. While
it is of course possible to spin out hypotheses related to both of these conditions independently, for
now we start with what we think is a fairly parsimonious (and uncontroversial) claim: we expect
potential new party leaders in long-standing democracies to both be more constrained in where
they can enter the political spectrum, and to care more about the policy consequences of doing so,
than are potential party leaders in newly formed democracies.
With regards to established democracies, political entrepreneurs themselves have generally
spent years of their career advocating for particular policy positions, thus developing a certain level
of commitment to these issue stances. As well, they often have acceded to positions of power among
constituents who care about these issues, which restricts their programmatic flexibility and induces
de facto constraints on where such a leader can place a new political party. At the mass level, in
long-standing democracies voters will tend to have more information about political personalities;
and the more that is known about a politician and what he or she stands for, the less plausible it
is that he or she can start a political party elsewhere in the political spectrum.
In contrast, we expect that both platform flexibility and the value of office holding will
be greater in newly competitive party systems. Party leaders in new democracies are less well-
known to the public, and party organizations in new democracies generally have less ideologically-
inclined internal cadres, and weaker mechanisms by which to hold leaders accountable (Lewis 2000,
Markowski 2002). Parties in new democracies often struggle to survive, and the value of having
the resources (including physical offices) that come with winning seats in the parliament is likely
to be correspondingly more important (Marsh 2002, Tucker 2002). In a new democracy, a party
that is unable to secure parliamentary representation may not continue to be a party much longer
(Grzymala-Busse 2002, Bugajski 2002). Thus based on the theoretical framework we have put
forward in this section, we would expect to see more new more party entry in party systems with
more parties, but we would expect this relationship to be either more pronounced – or perhaps
even only present – in older democracies as opposed to newer democracies.
11
The assumption that party competition is more ‘policy-based’ in post-communist than in
Western Europe is also supported by quantitative and qualitative evidence. Kitschelt and Freeze
(2011) demonstrate that the coherence and stability of parties’ programmatic campaign platforms
tends to be significantly higher in Western Europe than it is in post-communist cases. In addition, a
simple quantitative approach comparing parties’ ideological stability using two different ideological
metrics shows substantively and statistically significant differences in stability between our Freedom
House sample of Post-Communist countries and Western Europe.12 To take a few qualitative
cases, Moldova, for example, has three political parties that are practically indistinguishable on
programmatic grounds (Senyuva 2010); Romania has a Democratic Liberal Party and a National
Liberal Party, plus a Social Democratic Party that ran in the 2009 elections as part of a coalition
with the Conservative Alliance (Downs 2009). Post-communist Eastern Europe is also replete with
examples of individuals politicians switching parties to escape the wrath of voters (Zielinski et al.
2005) or even entire parties moving across the political spectrum, as has been most prominently
accomplished by FIDESZ in Hungary (Tucker 2006, Wittenberg 2006). Indeed, in an interview
in an ex-Soviet Republic a pollster explained to one of us how he had been hired by a group of
politicians to conduct focus groups in order to find anywhere across the political spectrum where
this new party could enter that would yield the greatest chance of getting into the next parliament.
In the following section, therefore, we test these predictions empirically using data from European
elections that have taken place since the collapse of communism, which have the very nice feature
of allowing us to contrast elections in new democracies (East-Central Europe) with established
democracies (Western Europe) while simultaneously controlling for both time and (roughly) space.
12The data used for these confirmatory analyses were taken from the Comparative Election Study
(respondent placement items), and from the Lowe, Benoit, Laver, and Mikhaylov (2011) measure of
party positioning (based on log-odds of sentences in party manifestos). Further details and results
available from the authors’ upon request.
12
3 Evidence from Two Decades of European Elections
3.1 ENP and New Party Entry in Western Europe
We begin by analyzing 95 parliamentary elections that took place between 1990-2009 in Western
Europe. For each election, we calculate the effective number of parties (hereafter ENP) that resulted
from the previous election, or 1∑i1 p
2i
where pi is the proportion of the vote receive by each party i
(Laakso and Taagepera 1979; Golosov 2010).13 Our goal, is to see whether there is a systematic
relationship between ENP at time ‘t-1’ and the emergence of new political parties at time ‘t’.
In Table 1, we operationalize the emergence of new political parties by simply counting the
number of new parties that received at least 2% of the vote in that election; the results are robust
to using an alternative threshold as high as 5%.14 In Model 1 of Table 1, we examine the bivariate
relationship between ENP in the previous election and the number of new parties that competed in
the current election. However, in order to be sure that any bivariate relationship between ENP and
the number of new parties is not the product of a spurious relationship due to an omitted variable,
we also present results from a more fully specified multivariate model in Model 2. Sections 1 and 2
of this paper point to the importance of controlling for the permissiveness of the electoral system,
which we do in two ways: by using the natural log of average district magnitude;15 and by including
13We follow Taagepera’s (1997) bounding method regarding the treatment of the categories of
“Others” and “Independents.” See Taagepera (1997) for further details.14Results available from the authors upon request. Using a threshold below 2% seems both
substantively less important and introduces serious concerns of measurement error due to the
frequent use of “other” categories in reporting election results (Powell and Tucker 2009).15To measure district magnitude, we use a procedure which accounts for the difference between
single-tier and multi-tier electoral systems. In the former, our measure of district magnitude is
simply the mean district size in a country’s single tier. In multi-tier systems, we calculate magnitude
as a weighted function of the average district size in each tier. We use the natural log as opposed
to the actual district magnitude so as not to overemphasize states with a single national district.
We are currently missing 4 observations of district magnitude in our total sample of 183 West and
East European elections. Rather than risk introducing bias through the use of listwise-deletion
(King et al. 2001), we instead mean-replace these missing values and add a dummy variable to
the analysis identifying these mean-replaced cases. With this set up, the coefficient on district
magnitude should be interpreted as the effect of district magnitude on new party entry for the
cases for which we actually have observations of district magnitude. The results for the dummy
13
a dummy variable for proportional electoral systems.16 Controlling for district magnitude is not
only important as a measure of electoral permissiveness; more generally, the size of electoral districts
is probably the most consistent way of measuring the costs of party entry, since the number of votes
necessary to gain representation, and by implication the resources required, decreases as district size
increases. We also control for a number of other factors that have been posited to affect electoral
volatility from the demand-side, including economic conditions (Roberts and Wibbels 1999, Tavits
2005),17 ethnic fractionalization (Birnir 2006, Madrid 2005), and electoral turnout in the current
election (Bartolini and Mair 1990; Madrid 2005). Finally, we also control for regime type with
a dummy variable that isolates pure presidential systems from parliamentary systems and mixed
regimes with both parliamentary and presidential features. Including the full set of controls has the
added advantage of making our results more directly comparable to the existing empirical literature
on new party entry in Western Europe discussed at the end of Section 2.
—INSERT TABLE 1 ABOUT HERE—
Model 1 of Table 1 shows that across the entire West European dataset, there is a clear
bivariate relationship between the effective number of parties in the previous election and the
number of new parties receiving at least two percent of the vote in the current election (p < .05).
Moreover, the size of this effect is substantively meaningful: having 3-4 more effective parties yields
a prediction of an additional new party. Put another way, we expect on average a 5-6 party system
to have an extra new party per election as compared to a 2 party system. This finding is completely
in line with the intuition developed in the previous section, and is the opposite from what a standard
variables identifying the missing cases – which are essentially meaningless because they are simply
a function of whatever value we use to replace the missing observations – are not included in the
tables.16As repoted below, we have also run analyses with a trichotomous distinction between pure
proportional systems, mixed systems which combine proportional and majoritarian formulas in
different tiers, and pure single-member district (SMD) systems. For the West European sample, a
pure-SMD dummy singles out France and Great Britain, and a mixed system dummy singles out
Germany and post-1993 Italy. In total, 70 of 95 elections in the West European sample employed
pure-proportional systems. In the East European sample only one of our 88 elections used a pure
SMD system, so the proportional dummy is sufficient.17We operationalize economic conditions using the change in GDP from one election to the next.
14
Downsian intuition would have led us to expect. Furthermore, the finding is robust to including
the control variables for alternative theoretical explanations in Model 2. Here the magnitude of
the coefficient on ENP is practically unchanged, suggesting that ENP was not simply proxying
for one of these other factors, and, perhaps most crucially, that ENP is not simply picking up the
permissiveness of the electoral system.
In particular, interested readers will note that in Table 1 we do not find a statistically signif-
icant effect for proportional electoral rules on new party entry; in fact the coefficient is actually in
the opposite direction.18 Similarly, we find no effect for district size (Log Weighted District Magni-
tude) on new party entry; while this time the coefficient is in the correct direction, it is practically
the same size as the standard error. These findings are inconsistent with what previous studies (e.g.
Harmel and Robertson 1985) have found. Furthermore, these somewhat unexpected findings do
not result from the fact that party system fragmentation is over-determined by a country’s electoral
system: the bivariate correlation between proportional representational systems and ENP in our
sample of West European elections is actually weakly negative (r = −.07), and that between ENP
and a system’s logged district magnitude is fairly weak (r = .27). Should such findings hold up
to further scrutiny, it would represent an important challenge to the received wisdom that more
permissive electoral systems, in and of themselves, are responsible for generating incentives for
party formation. For now, however, it is prudent to be cautious in interpreting these results, if for
no other reason that the West European sample has 70 proportional representation observations
out of 95 total elections.
Of course, there is potential for noise in our measure of new party entry. After all, our
intuition regarding the motivation of potential party leaders is based on the idea that they will
enter parliament and affect policy outcomes. Using a threshold for inclusion as a new party as low
as 2% holds open the possibility that we are also capturing parties that knew they were unlikely
to actually enter parliament, and thus were motivated by other concerns.19 Somewhat problematic
18If we instead use a three-way classifcation of electoral systems, and make pure-SMD systems
the omitted category, we see that pure proportional systems actually have a negative impact on
entry, while mixed systems have a positive but non-significant impact on entry (results available
upon request). Of course, we must approach these results with caution, due the fact that our
sample contains a preponderance of pure-proportional cases.19We say “possibility” here because it is equally possible that such small parties simply miscal-
15
from our perspective is the fact that these small parties “count” as much in our measure of our
dependent variable as larger parties that did go on to enter the parliament. With this in mind, we
rerun our analyses using instead the total share of the vote earned by new parties as the dependent
variable, effectively allowing the larger new parties to have more of an effect on the results of the
analysis than smaller new parties; results are presented in Table 2.
—INSERT TABLE 2 ABOUT HERE—
Table 2 reveals that the findings from Table 1 are robust to reconceptualizing our dependent
variable as the share of the vote earned by new parties. Once again we see the expected relationship
in both the bivariate and multivariate analyses: higher ENP is positively associated with new parties
winning a large share of the vote. The effect is still substantively meaningful – an additional 3-4
more effective political parties leads to new parties earning 6-9% more of the vote – and, if anything,
we now have even greater statistical confidence in these effects (p < .01 in both the multivariate
and bivariate analysis). District size also continues to have a similar non-statistically significant
positive effect (again the coefficient is almost exactly the size of the standard error). However, our
finding regarding the effect of electoral rules is now much stronger: we get clearly fewer votes for
new parties in proportional representation systems than single member districts or mixed systems
once we control for the other variables in the analysis. Indeed, the size of this effect is substantively
significant as well: new parties in proportional representation systems gain on average more than
8% vote share less than those in mixed and SMD systems. Once again, the preponderance of
proportional cases in the West European sample necessitates caution in interpreting these results.
Finally, we also now find a statistically significant effect for turnout, with each additional 5% of
turnout leading to an additional 1% of the vote for new parties.20
culated their potential support and did indeed run with every intention of entering parliament.20We have also run the analysis recasting ENP not as continuous variable, but rather as a series
of dummy variables for 2, 3, 4, 5, and 5+ party systems. We are choosing not to include these
results in the text of the paper because we simply lack enough observations in each category to
be as confident of the findings as we would like, but with that caveat in mind the results of these
analyses are again largely in line with our theoretical expectations. While there is some variety
across different specifications of the models, in general we find a bump up in new party entry when
we move from 2 party systems to 3 or 4 party systems, another bump when we move to 5 party
16
3.2 ENP and New Party Entry in Eastern Europe
The results in Section 3.1 suggest that the predicted positive relationship between status quo
party system fragmentation and party entry emerges in exactly the subset of countries where our
model suggests we should find such a relationship: the established democracies of Western Europe.
However, the argument also suggests that we should be less likely to find such support in countries
where individual politicians have more freedom to decide where in the political spectrum to place a
new political party; and where they may be less concerned with actual policy outcomes relative to
office holding. To test this implication, we collected data on new party entry from 88 elections that
took place across 21 post-communist East European countries during the same time period.21 To
be clear, we are not arguing that all potential new party leaders in post-communist were completely
unconstrained in where they could attempt to place a new political party; nor are we suggesting
that no one cared about policy outcomes. We are, however, proposing that relative to potential
new party leaders in Western Europe, they were likely to have been less constrained and more
interested in office holding for the myriad of reasons we laid out above in Section 2.3.
With these data in hand, we rerun all of these analyses conducted in the previous section.
—INSERT TABLE 3 ABOUT HERE—
The bottom line is that no matter how you slice the data, there is not any robust evidence of a
relationship between the effective number of political parties in a country and new party entry in
the first two decades of post-communist elections. Clearly, the relationship between ENP and new
party entry that was present in Western Europe during this time period simply was not present
systems, and then another bump when we move to 6 or more party systems. Results available from
authors upon request.21More specifically, we include all pairs of parliamentary elections that took place in the first
two decades of post-communist elections in countries that were ranked “Free” or “Partially Free”
by Freedom House at the time of both elections. There is actually an 89th election that qualifies
on these grounds, the 1998 Ukrainian parliamentary election, but it has an inordinately high ENP
(28.34; no other election has an ENP higher than 14 and most are in the single digits). Given
that it is only one case out of 89, we chose to simply omit this election from our analysis for now.
Including this election leads to completely non-robust results in Table 4, and has no effect on the
basic conclusion that no relationship exists between the ENP at time ‘t-1’ and entry at time ‘t’ in
the East European sample.
17
during the exact same period of time in East-Central Europe. In fact, in this sample of cases only
the change in growth rates seems to exert any impact on the formation of new parties; both party
system size and electoral institutions seem equally unimportant.
Therefore, we have added reason to think that the positive results in Section 3.1 are not
simply mechanical, nor are they a function of some unobserved characteristic of politics in Europe
in 1990s and 2000s. Instead, we believe the findings reflect the inherent dynamic identified by our
theory of new party entry: the more politicians are constrained in terms of where they can enter the
political spectrum, and the more they care about the policy consequences of new party formation
in relation to the benefits of office holding, the more likely we are to witness more new party entry
when the effective number of parties is higher. However macro-level analysis of this nature can by
construct only test the implications of the decisions of new party leaders as filtered through the
actions of voters. Thus in the following section we attempt to move our analysis one step closer to
the actual decision-making process underlying our model: the actions of individual politicians.
4 Evidence from the Turkish Grand National Assembly
We now examine the same argument in a single legislative context, using a new data set on party
formation in the Turkish Grand National Assembly (TGNA). Party entry in Turkey is generally a
legislative phenomenon. More particularly, rather than simply forming and competing in subsequent
elections, new parties in Turkey typically acquire political relevance in real time by benefiting
from shifts in the partisan allegiances of currently sitting Members of Parliament (MP’s). For
example, both the Justice and Development Party (JDP) and the Republican People’s Party (RPP),
today’s two most prominent contenders, formed when a group of MP’s defected from an existing
organization. This implies that the phenomenon of party entry in the Turkish party system overlaps
empirically with the phenomenon of party-switching in the TGNA.22
With regards to our argument’s scope conditions, it is important to note that Turkish politi-
cians and party leaders are often motivated by considerations of ideology and policy represen-
tation.23 As well, Turkish political entrepreneurs are often constrained in the range of credible
22Legislative party-switching has been studied in a variety of contexts, including Brazil (De-
sposato 2006), Italy (Heller and Mershon 2005), and Japan (Reed and Shiner 2003).23Politics throughout the 1960’s and 1970’s was characterized by a strong left-right divide, com-
18
issue-related stances they can assume on specific policy dimensions.24 Programmatic motivations
and platform constraints similarly influence processes of new party formation in the Turkish TGNA.
The JDP emerged when a group of prominent MP’s from within the Islamic camp formed a new
party on the center-right whose goal was to weaken secularist restrictions on Islamic expression in
the public sphere, and to promote private rather than public sector development. The RPP was
formed in 1993 by Deniz Baykal, a politician with a long history of participation in leftist parties,
who was then joined by many left-leaning MP’s dissatisfied with their party’s participation in a
center-right coalition government.25
Of course we make no claim that all, or even most, of the volatility that occurs within the
TGNA has ‘policy-seeking’ roots. Sayarı (2000) lists ideological/policy disputes as one of three
reasons an MP might change his or her partisan affiliation during a legislative term. In addition,
MP’s often switch parties in order obtain more favorable list positions in the subsequent election
(office-seeking); and others switch for purely material reasons (rent-seeking). Not unlike the research
design in Section 3, our goal here is to leverage this variation in legislative motivations to test our
conditional hypothesis as to the relationship between status quo fragmentation and the propensity
for new party formation.
plemented in the second half of the 1970’s with parties whose support was grounded in their pro-
grammatic commitments to nationalism and political Islam. While the left-right divide has since
withered, issues of nationalism and political Islam are still of central importance to the Turkish
party system (Kselman 2012).24After over 20 years as an organizer and then leader in the world of political Islam, current
Prime Minister Recep Tayyıp Erdogan could not credibly announce a secularist position regarding
a woman’s right to wear head coverings in public buildings. As well, it would be in no way credible
for Devlet Bahceli, longstanding leader of the Nationalist Action Party, to announce a conciliatory
policy towards Kurdish insurgents in the country’s Southeast.25The examples quickly multiply: the Democratic Turkey Party caucus was formed in 1997 by
MP’s who were allied with Suleyman Demirel, a career center-right politician since the 1960’s,
who objected on programmatic grounds to the True Path Party’s participation in an Islamist-led
coalition; the Grand Unity Party was formed in 1993 by the more religiously-oriented wing of the
Nationalist Action Party’s legislative caucus; etc.
19
4.1 Varieties of Legislative Volatility
The first step in implementing this research design is distinguishing between different forms of
legislative volatility. In that vein, a non-negligible number of new parties which form in the TGNA
never compete in a single electoral contest, and some are so fleeting as to exist for no more than
a week! Thus, within the subset of new parties we will distinguish between switches to ephemeral
parties, which both form and then disappear in the same legislative session, and those to genuine
new parties which form in a legislative session and then compete in the subsequent election.
As already noted, volatility which results from the formation of genuine new parties is typi-
cally characterized by policy-seeking motivations and platform constraints. As such, and in keeping
with the above argument, we expect the prevalence of genuinely new parties in the TGNA to be
higher when status quo legislative fragmentation is higher. In contrast to volatility which results
from the formation of genuinely new parties, the appearance of ephemeral new parties is most
likely a result of purely office- or rent-seeking considerations. Indeed, one can hardly imagine that
a party which forms and dissolves in the span of a couple of months (or less...) – and which never
promotes a platform to voters in the context of a general election campaign – was created for the
sake of influencing policy. Rather, as suggested below, these parties most likely serve as ’holding
cells’ in which MP’s can temporarily relocate in the hope that one of the existing parties will then
offer some form of office or rent-motivated inducement to re-affiliate. Thus, again in keeping with
the paper’s theoretical argument, we do not expect to uncover a positive relationship between the
formation of short-lived parties and status quo fragmentation.
Many legislators also switch within the set of pre-existing parties.26 For our present purpose,
rather than explicitly investigating the determinants of this within-existing party volatility, we
instead use our data on such switches to lend further credence to the evidence we find from switchers
to new parties. Namely, if we can demonstrate that switches between pre-existing parties are not
positively correlated with status quo legislative fragmentation, then it would be additional evidence
that any evidence of a positive relationship between status quo fragmentation and switching to
genuinely new parties is not spuriously driven by the fact that all forms of legislative volatility are
26Most such switches occur within parties of the same ideological family, and/or from opposition
to incumbent parties.
20
positively correlated with fragmentation.
The data we use to analyze the relationship between party system fragmentation and the
various forms of legislative volatility described above cover the period 1987-2007, which includes
the 18th through 22nd sessions of the TGNA. It codes each time a Turkish MP formally switches
his or her partisan affiliation, and records their pre- and post-switch affiliations.27 The data set
contains information on a total of 2,550 Turkish legislators; individuals who served in more than
one session are coded as distinct observations for each legislature in which they served. Of these
2,550 legislative observations, a total of 428 switched partisan affiliation at least once during the
associated legislative session (16.8%).28 Cut another way, the data set contains 542 total ‘switch
events’, a number which is padded due to the fact that some MP’s switch parties more than once
in a session. The following results are qualitatively identical whether we use the total number of
‘switches’ or the total number of ‘switchers’ as our dependent variable. In particular, there are
only three instances in the entire data set in which an MP switches to more than one ‘genuine’
new party in the same session, thus eliminating the possibility that we might be overcounting when
measuring the form of volatility most important for testing our theory.
Of these 542 switch events, 300 represent switches to new party organizations, and the re-
maining 242 represent switches within the set of preexisting parties. Regarding the latter, it is
important to note a defining aspect of Turkish electoral institutions: an unusually high national
threshold, such that any party receiving less than 10% of the total votes cast in a general election
is excluded from parliamentary representation. Switches to pre-existing parties thus include legis-
lators that move within the set of current parliamentary parties; but also switches by legislators to
27Some of the core material for this data set was generously shared by Erol Tuncer and Tuncer
Yılmaz of the TGNA Parliamentary Library in Ankara.28A number of parties have been forced to close by the Turkish Constitutional Court. In general
the ‘new’ parties which emerge from these closures are clearly successor parties, and MP’s who move
from the closed party to the successor party are not coded as ‘changing’ parties. The currently
ruling JDP represents one clear exception to this rule. After the forced closure of the Virtue
Party in 2001, Virtue Party leadership quickly reconstituted itself as the Felicity Party. However,
a group of dissident Virtue MP’s chose to remain unaffiliated, and eventually to form the JDP, a
genuinely new party staking out new programmatic ground and operating with distinct leadership
personalities and organizational structures. We thus code the decision by former Virtue Party MP’s
to reaffiliate with the JDP as switches to a new party.
21
parties who may not have gained access to parliament for having fallen beneath the 10% threshold,
but who nonetheless competed in the preceding general election. As already noted, within the set
of switches to new party organizations, we will distinguish between truly ephemeral parties, which
formed and then closed in the same legislative session without ever competing in an election; and
genuine new parties which form in a session, exist at that session’s end, and then compete in the
subsequent election. 243 of the 300 switches to new parties are of the genuine variety, while 57 are
of the ephemeral variety.
4.2 ‘Genuine’ New Party Entry and the ENPP
The effective number of legislative parties, our primary independent variable, varied a good bit
during the time period in question. Turgut Ozal’s center-right Motherland Party (MOP) held clear
parliamentary majorities in the first eight years after the return to democracy in 1983.29 The MOP’s
status as the system’s dominant party was thrown into doubt with the referendum of 1987, which
legalized the return to politics of previously banned political leaders from the 1970’s. These leaders
quickly assumed control over a number of smaller pre-existing parties, and after eight years of MOP
predominance the 1991 general elections yielded a more fragmented Parliament. Thus ensued a
decade of fragile coalition governments and political instability, a decade which also witnessed the
appearance a variety of new party organizations, some of which were more long-lived than others.
Beginning in 2002 the number of legislative parties once again shrunk, with the JDP winning
a single-party parliamentary majority and the RPP entering as the only opposition party. To
capture this variance in legislative fragmentation we will use the effective number of parliamentary
parties (ENPP), measured in the standard way as the inverse of the sum of parties’ squared seat
percentages. Figure 1 presents the initial ENPP for the five legislative sessions in question.
—INSERT FIGURE 1 ABOUT HERE—
29A military junta governed from 1980-1983, and restricted the nature of competition in the
1983 transitional election; two of the three parties competing in this election were in fact military
creations. In this first post-junta election the MOP emerged as the plurality winner (45.1% vote
share) due to its status as the only genuinely independent organization, a result which surprised
nearly everyone (including the military; see Ahmad 1993 and Zurcher 2000).
22
The 18th (1987-1991) and 22nd (2002-2007) legislatures both began with an ENPP of roughly two,
and both were presided over by large parties (the MOP and JDP respectively). In contrast, the
19th, 20th, and 21st legislative sessions began in a much more fragmented fashion, opening with
an ENPP of 3.58, 4.40, and 4.87 respectively.
As such, we expect the formation of genuine new parties to be more prevalent in the middle
three legislative sessions than in the 18th or the 22nd. On the other hand, we would not expect
the formation of ephemeral new parties to co-vary with ENPP in this manner. Finally, we remain
agnostic as to how switches within the set of pre-existing parties will vary according to legislative
session; but if we find that they do not positively correlate with the ENPP, this will afford greater
confidence in the non-spurious nature of any such correlation we find with the entry of genuine new
parties. We begin by presenting a simple ‘count’ of new parties which form in the TGNA during a
legislative session, distinguishing between those that are genuine and those that are ephemeral.
—INSERT FIGURE 2 ABOUT HERE—
The first thing to note is that, consistent with our theory, the entry of genuine new parties is
positively correlated with the ENPP, and indeed climbs in stepwise fashion with a legislature’s initial
ENPP: it was lowest in the 22nd legislature (two new parties) which was also the least fragmented
(ENPP=1.84), second lowest in the 18th session which was the second-most initially fragmented
(three new parties, initial ENPP=2.05), and highest (5 new parties) in the 21st legislature which
was also the most fragmented (ENPP=4.87). On the other hand, and also consistent with our
theory, the number of ephemeral parties which form in a legislative session bears little relationship
to the ENPP. The most noteworthy finding here is the overwhelming emergence of such parties in
the 19th legislative session (15 ephemeral parties created!), with the remaining ephemeral parties
spread out over the 18th, 21st, and 22nd sessions (no such parties formed in the 20th legislative
session).30
30The proliferation of such parties after the 1991 general election may have resulted from the
fact that this contest instituted, for the first and last time in Turkish politics, a preference voting
system that allowed a number of ‘new faces’ to enter parliament. Many MP’s elected on the basis
of preference votes joined these ephemeral new parties, and then went on to reaffiliate with one of
the pre-existing parties before the 19th session ended, suggesting that such ephemeral organizations
23
Although the count data from Figure 2 provide evidence consistent with our primary hypoth-
esis, the total number of MP’s who switch from old parties to new parties in a legislative session
provides an even more appropriate measure: rather than treating large and small parties equally,
it captures the overall weight of new entrants in any given parliamentary term. Figure 3 presents
the total number of switches that MP’s made to genuinely new parties by legislative session.
—INSERT FIGURE 3 ABOUT HERE—
Once again the data here is supportive of our core hypothesis, as the number of switches to genuinely
new parties rises in a stepwise fashion with a legislature’s initial ENPP: it was lowest in the 22nd
legislature (six total switches to new parties) which was also the least fragmented, second lowest in
the 18th session which was the second-most initially fragmented (18 switches to new parties), and
so on to the 21st legislature which was the most fragmented and had 135 switches to new parties.
Indeed, while the initial ENPP and the number of switches to genuine new parties increase together
in a stepwise fashion across legislatures, there is a substantial jump in the number of new party
switches in this most fragmented session.31 A similar ‘jump’ existed in the West European data
at 5-party systems (see footnote 20). The relationship between party system fragmentation and
the policy-based incentives to form new parties may thus be non-linear (see Conclusion). While we
look forward to investigating the possibilities of such non-linearities in future work, for our present
purposes the identical rank-ordering of initial fragmentation and the number of switches to genuine
new parties provides evidence in our favor.
What about the other types of switching behavior, namely switches to ephemeral parties and
switches which occur within the set of existing parties? Figure 4 presents the tallies, once again
broken down by legislative session.
—INSERT FIGURE 4 ABOUT HERE—
may have served as temporary refuges from which MP’s could bargain their affiliation to highest
paying status quo party.31This was the session in which, first of all, the currently ruling JDP first emerged and gained
the allegiance of 60 MP’s; and in which the New Turkey Party emerged and gained the allegiance
of 66 MP’s, most of whom were defectors from the Democratic Left Party (which was in control of
a less then palatable coalition with parties of the center-right and nationalist-right).
24
Figure 4 reveals that switches to short-lived new parties are not correlated with the initial ENPP,
and indeed tend to be concentrated in the 19th session, with a small number also occurring in the
18th, 21st, and 22nd sessions. As for changes within the set of existing parties, these also bear no
clear relationship to legislative fragmentation. The highest number occurred in the 19th session,
which ranked third in initial ENPP. As well, the 22nd session experienced a good deal of such
volatility despite being the least fragmented in our data set, and in fact experienced nine more
such switches than the highly fragmented 21st session (44 compared to 35). The lack of a clear
relationship between such switches and initial ENPP serves as additional evidence that the positive
correlation between the formation of genuine new parties and fragmentation is not the artefact of
a more general relationship between fragmentation and volatility broadly conceived.
5 Conclusion
Sections 3 and 4 thus provide macro- and micro-level empirical evidence in favor of the paper’s
core hypothesis, developed in Section 2, that the formation of new parties should be positively
correlated with the pre-existing number of political parties when politicians are sufficiently platform-
constrained and policy-seeking. We have established the paper’s basic claim using a variety of
complementary approaches. We’ve first provided a rigorous argument, grounded in formal logic,
that when the aforementioned scope conditions are satisfied we should see a positive relationship
between status quo party system fragmentation and party entry. We then presented an empirical
analysis of the relationship between ENP and party entry across two decades of European elections.
Finally, we complemented this with micro-level data on the relationship between fragmentation and
defections to new parties by individual Turkish legislators over the same two decades. While any
one of these findings alone might not be enough to convince readers, taken together we believe they
offer a compelling argument that, going forward, the idea that we ought to find more new party
formation in larger party systems must be part of the broader discussion.
Important opportunities clearly exist for future research based on the ideas laid out in this
paper. Theoretically, while our goal here has been to illustrate the strong tendency for the policy
consequences of entry to improve as the number of parties in a party system increases, there exist
avenues for further research investigating potential non-linearities in this relationship. In particular,
25
it would be interesting to get a better sense of whether or not there is a ‘ceiling’ on the comparative
static we’ve identified. For example, there is probably little difference between the likelihood of
entry in a 17 party system and a 16 party system, but should we also draw the same conclusion
about a 8 party system and a 7 party system? Similarly, are there certain ranges of status quo
fragmentation over which the effect we’ve uncovered is particularly strong? Both the European
and Turkish data suggest that the move from 2 to 3 status quo parties is a qualitatively important
jump. However, they both also suggest that a second jump, that from roughly 4.5 to roughly 5.5
parties, is also pronounced when it comes to the substantive size of the effect. These potential
non-linearities comprise an important avenue for future theoretical work.
From an empirical standpoint, there is room for future research extending both the temporal
and geographic scope of our large N analysis. It would be particularly interesting to move from a
dichotomous measure of our scope conditions (i.e. West vs. East Europe) to a more continuous
measure, and thus examine the relationship between ENP and new party entry in situations where
potential new party leaders may be less constrained than in a long standing established democracy,
but perhaps more constrained than in the post-communist context. A newly emerging dataset on
patterns of accountability in 88 contemporary democracies will, at least for the most recent decade,
allow us to measure the relevance and coherence of ‘programmatic’ competition in a wide range of
national contexts.32 To the extent that ‘programmatism’ represents a useful proxy for our scope
conditions, this represents a promising avenue for future empirical research.
As well, while we have in this manuscript focused entirely on whether or not a new party
enters, the theoretical framework also has implications for where new parties should enter the
political spectrum: in smaller party systems entry tends to occur in the center of the political
spectrum; while in multi-party systems entry tends to occur everywhere but the range of policy
positions near the electoral median. By introducing measures of party positions into our data
analysis we will be able to assess whether this aspect of our argument also finds support. Finally,
it would eventually be interesting to investigate whether or not new party entry in ‘programmatic’
contexts does indeed have the policy consequences we predict. When a party enters in multi-party
systems, does it tend to create policy outcomes closer to its own position than those which would
32This dataset resulted form a collaboration of researchers from Duke University and the World
Bank; the data collection process was lead by Herbert Kitschelt.
26
have emerged absent the decision to enter? Does entry in more concentrated party systems tend
to ‘push’ policy outcomes further from the entrant’s ideal point than would have otherwise been
the case? These ideas for extending our current analyses highlight that, beyond presenting and
then testing a novel theoretical argument about party entry, one of this paper’s primary strengths
is developing a framework which can guide a wide of variety of future analyses of party formation
in democratic states.
27
Table 1: Effective Number of Parties and Count of New Parties in Western Europe, 1987-2009
(1) (2)VARIABLES Count of New Parties Count of New Parties
Effective Number of Parties at Election 1 0.287** 0.267**(0.109) (0.118)
Log Weighted District Magnitude 0.158(0.149)
Mixed Pres/Parl System -0.275(0.632)
Proportional Representation -0.733(0.491)
GDP Change Between Elections 0.462(0.942)
Turnout 0.018**(0.006)
Ethnic Fractionalization -0.166(0.966)
Constant -0.427 -2.040(0.370) (1.408)
Observations 95 95R-squared 0.180 0.300
Standard Errors Clustered by CountryRobust standard errors in parentheses
*** p<0.01, ** p<0.05, * p<0.1Dummy Variable for Missing Data omitted from Table
28
Table 2: Effective Number of Parties and Share of Vote Earned by New Parties in Western Europe,1987-2009
(1) (2)VARIABLES New Parties Share New Parties Share
Effective Number of Parties at Election 1 2.266*** 2.331***(0.733) (0.756)
Log Weighted District Magnitude 0.844(0.856)
Mixed Pres/Parl System -6.208(4.394)
Proportional Representation -8.369***(2.655)
GDP Change Between Elections 2.251(5.834)
Turnout 0.208***(0.056)
Ethnic Fractionalization -2.578(6.799)
Constant -4.505* -17.813**(2.306) (8.471)
Observations 95 95R-squared 0.167 0.292
Standard Errors Clustered by CountryRobust standard errors in parentheses
*** p<0.01, ** p<0.05, * p<0.1Dummy variable for Missing Data Omitted from Table
29
Table 3: New Parties in Eastern Europe, 1991-2009
(1) (2) (3) (4)VARIABLES Count New Count New Share New Share New
Effective Number of Parties at Election 1 0.064 -0.009 0.132 -0.439(0.112) (0.153) (0.727) (1.170)
Log Weighted District Magnitude 0.065 1.358(0.213) (2.710)
Presidential System 1.655 9.841(1.143) (11.104)
Proportional Representation 0.100 -2.555(0.675) (8.053)
GDP Change Between Elections -2.868** -12.438(1.148) (9.063)
Turnout 0.014 -0.092(0.033) (0.331)
Ethnic Fractionalization -0.702 6.750(1.424) (21.933)
Constant 3.102*** 5.812* 31.541*** 49.013*(0.669) (2.933) (5.228) (23.882)
Observations 88 88 88 88R-squared 0.005 0.188 0.000 0.046
Standard Errors Clustered by CountryRobust standard errors in parentheses
*** p<0.01, ** p<0.05, * p<0.1Dummy Variable for Missing Data omitted from Table
30
Figure 1: The Effective Number of Parliamentary Parties
01
23
45
EN
PP
18 19 20 21 22
31
Figure 2: New Party ‘Counts’
0
5
10
15
18 19 20 21 22
Genuine Count Ephemeral Count
32
Figure 3: Genuine New Party ‘Switches’
050
100
150
18 19 20 21 22
33
Figure 4: Other Switching Behaviors
0
20
40
60
80
18 19 20 21 22
Ephemeral Pre-Existing
34
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